mtgrizrule
Well-known member
I am glad someone clarified the Bennett rumors. I thought it was a Grady Bennett coaching rumor. Speaking of which, would really like to see Grady be on the GRIZ staff.
jcu27 said:Maybe you guys should look at Roderick's twitter. Highly doubt he goes to the Griz considering in a tweet part of it said "Missoula clowns."
havgrizfan said:Roderick rumors are swirling and not just on Egriz. Bennett from Oregon is A HELL NO. He's still at Oregon and doesn't appear ready to leave even though Marcus is the man.
Does it matter?wbtfg said:jcu27 said:Maybe you guys should look at Roderick's twitter. Highly doubt he goes to the Griz considering in a tweet part of it said "Missoula clowns."
That was a hockey reference, no?
If you were thinking about transferring somewhere would you say anything like that?wbtfg said:Context always matters
BWahlberg said:Loss to graduation is in place (I think)
Kalekini in for Hendrickson
Counts for Moore
Kirschner for Nguyen
Craig/Richards/Pierson for Hardy
Haynes for Carver
Warren/Naccarato/Walcott for Gratton
Holmes for Harris
Holt for Stuberg
I'd posted a week or so ago the three spots this team needs to find players at, QB, WR, S. And not that the talent is outside of the current ranks, but it's just those three spots I've seen the biggest lapse in this year compared to other more dominant years.
notebook: Bobcats went to school to solve Griz running game
November 19, 2012 11:00 pm •
... State coach Rob Ash said his team “went to school” defensively at the end of last season. It had to, especially after a pair of option-oriented running teams handed the Bobcats two humbling, debilitating losses. One of those opponents was rival Montana, who knocked off then-No. 1 MSU 36-10 while rushing for 309 yards in the regular-season finale at Bobcat Stadium in Bozeman.
But in the latest reprisal of their 112-year-old rivalry Saturday, Montana State was much better prepared. And it resulted in the Cats beating the Griz for the second time in three years and winning a share of the Big Sky Conference championship for the third consecutive season.
The second-ranked Bobcats, led by defensive end Caleb Schreibeis, did a number on Montana’s vaunted running game for the better part of a 16-7 victory. MSU limited the Grizzlies to 168 yards on the ground, 74 fewer than their per-game average. After allowing 108 rushing yards in the first quarter, including a 47-yard touchdown by Peter Nguyen, the Bobcats shut down the Griz for just 60 yards the rest of the way.
In a role reversal from the year before, the Bobcats held the Grizzlies to an average of 4.4 yards per carry, nearly a full yard less than their season average. Ash said last year’s Cat-Griz game was “a tough day for us. Montana ran the football and got 36 points. We’re proud of our defense, and that didn’t sit well. So (defensive coordinator Jamie) Marshall went to school on how to stop some of the things Montana did against us that day.
“We’ve been working on stopping zone-read and pin-and-pull and the bubble (screens) and the things that go with this offense. We changed some schemes and worked on it in spring ball. This is not something that just happened this week. We’ve been working to try to stop this offense.”
Schreibeis was dominant. The senior from Billings West played his assignments and was in the right spots all day, piling up 16 tackles, a sack and 1½ tackles for loss. “I kind of knew during practice that I’d have a lot of opportunities for plays,” Schreibeis said. “We were solid on assignments and relentless to the ball. And that’s what we needed to do to win this game, and that’s what we did.” For his effort, Schreibeis was named the Big Sky Conference defensive player of the week Monday. Schreibeis finished the regular season as the league’s sack champion with 12 sacks.
Read more: http://billingsgazette.com/sports/college/big-sky-conference/montana-state-university/football/big-sky-notebook-bobcats-went-to-school-to-solve-griz/article_77c3ead8-08f1-5103-aa65-b15c3edd44b5.html#ixzz2Dig56RFs" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;